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Target 2035 – update on the quest for a probe for every protein

Authors :
Müller, Susanne
Ackloo, Suzanne
Al Chawaf, Arij
Al-Lazikani, Bissan
Antolin, Albert
Baell, Jonathan B.
Beck, Hartmut
Beedie, Shaunna
Betz, Ulrich A. K.
Bezerra, Gustavo Arruda
Brennan, Paul E.
Brown, David
Brown, Peter J.
Bullock, Alex N.
Carter, Adrian J.
Chaikuad, Apirat
Chaineau, Mathilde
Ciulli, Alessio
Collins, Ian
Dreher, Jan
Drewry, David
Edfeldt, Kristina
Edwards, Aled M.
Egner, Ursula
Frye, Stephen V.
Fuchs, Stephen M.
Hall, Matthew D.
Hartung, Ingo V.
Hillisch, Alexander
Hitchcock, Stephen H.
Homan, Evert
Kannan, Natarajan
Kiefer, James R.
Knapp, Stefan
Kostic, Milka
Kubicek, Stefan
Leach, Andrew R.
Lindemann, Sven
Marsden, Brian D.
Matsui, Hisanori
Meier, Jordan L.
Merk, Daniel
Michel, Maurice
Morgan, Maxwell R.
Mueller-Fahrnow, Anke
Owen, Dafydd R.
Perry, Benjamin G.
Rosenberg, Saul H.
Saikatendu, Kumar Singh
Schapira, Matthieu
Scholten, Cora
Sharma, Sujata
Simeonov, Anton
Sundström, Michael
Superti-Furga, Giulio
Todd, Matthew H.
Tredup, Claudia
Vedadi, Masoud
von Delft, Frank
Willson, Timothy M.
Winter, Georg E.
Workman, Paul
Arrowsmith, Cheryl H.
Source :
MedChemComm; 2022, Vol. 13 Issue: 1 p13-21, 9p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Twenty years after the publication of the first draft of the human genome, our knowledge of the human proteome is still fragmented. The challenge of translating the wealth of new knowledge from genomics into new medicines is that proteins, and not genes, are the primary executers of biological function. Therefore, much of how biology works in health and disease must be understood through the lens of protein function. Accordingly, a subset of human proteins has been at the heart of research interests of scientists over the centuries, and we have accumulated varying degrees of knowledge about approximately 65% of the human proteome. Nevertheless, a large proportion of proteins in the human proteome (∼35%) remains uncharacterized, and less than 5% of the human proteome has been successfully targeted for drug discovery. This highlights the profound disconnect between our abilities to obtain genetic information and subsequent development of effective medicines. Target 2035 is an international federation of biomedical scientists from the public and private sectors, which aims to address this gap by developing and applying new technologies to create by year 2035 chemogenomic libraries, chemical probes, and/or biological probes for the entire human proteome.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20402503 and 20402511
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
MedChemComm
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs58771949
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1md00228g